News:

Your username and password for these discussion forums are unique to the forums. Your forum login information is separate from your My Adventure Cycling login information, and your login info for the Cyclosource online store. You will need to create a separate login for each of these. However, to make things a bit easier, you can use the same email and password for all three accounts. Also, please note that your login information for the forums is not connected to your Adventure Cycling membership number. We apologize for any inconvenience caused.

We have blocked registrations from several countries because of the large quantities of spam that originate there. If the forum denies your legitimate registration, please ask our administrator for an exception. webmaster@adventurecycling.org will need your IP address, which you can find at many web sites, including http://whatismyipaddress.com.

Author
Topic: help choosing a bike (Read 6566 times)

I am going with a new touring frame. I am looking at a Long Haul Trucker, Soma Saga, Aurora Elite, or a Raleigh Port Townsend (the last two would be complete bikes. Cost is not as much a factor as reliability. Would be touring around the States and Canada. Self supported with tent bag, cooking gear etc.. I am 61 years old, 160 lbs medium frame. (53 or 54 cm.) Personal preference is for 700 wheel base but with good logic I can be talked into 26. I ride a Brooks or an old Ideale (my personal favorite) saddle and I am a bike mechanic so other than frame repairs I have no worries. I have read some on each one of these but I want some feedback from users with real life expedrience

I'm also quite interested here in the responses as I'm considering a touring bike as well and start my long distant tours. From the little research I've done so far, the Trek 520 seems to be the current industry standard.

Just my opinion but the frame is probably less of a concern for me than everything else you hang off of it starting with the wheels and drive chain. Given my choice of those components they would play well off any of the mentioned frames and many more from customs to Nashbar and do the job. The Long Haul Trucker seems to me to be the "go to touring bike" these days.

Recumbent.Lots of hauling capacity, ride pain free for tens of thousands of miles. Saddle? I don't need no saddle. My seat is 3 inches of padding and I have a backrest.Tour Easy or Gold Rush from Easy Racers. XStream from Rans.

The question of choosing a bike comes up often around here, imagine that, so a bit of searching the forums will reveal much. However, compared to other bike sites, we are low-traffic. You should also see how much is said about these models at places like crazyonabike.

I do not have a Soma Saga, but I do ride another one of their frames. Based on my experience, they make great frames: stiff, beautiful welds, and very nice paint. However, in my opinion, all of the frames and bikes you mentioned would work just fine for touring. If you have strong preferences for having exactly you want on the bike, it would be worth the extra cost of building up the frame yourself, if not, go with the complete bike. Personally, I'd get the Saga, just because I think it is the best looking of the lot (for me that matters), and I do want to choose every component. However, your mileage may vary.

Hey guys,I know there are some great bikes to purchase from a variety of dealers with most of their bikes being built out of North America. Why not have a custom bike built instead? You'll not only get everything you want with a selection of components but also a bike that is sized to your body. I'm going this route within the next few months. Your custom purchase will help the local economy as well. I guess if you're in a rush, a store purchase is your only option.

I am very satisfied with the LHT that I purchased last year. Not only is the price right, but it rides well for me under load. FWIW, I carry about 35 pounds of stuff with me. I am torn over whether to be sad that I got the 700 wheels instead of 26 inch wheels, or the canti's instead of the new disc brakes, but, in the end, it does what I need it to do, and it does it comfortably.

We've got a couple Trek 520s and a factory built LHT... Brooks Flyer or Flyer Specials are on each. Fully equipped the bikes cost about the same. Yes, there are some differences in the frame design and in the components but quite frankly, they are both durable and serviceable bikes as are the others you listed.

I did a 3,142 mile self-supported trip on a 26" wheeled rigid frame mountain bike that was set up for touring on the road. Outside of my time off-road in the Everglades backcountry I was wishing for drop bars and tires with lower rolling resistance. Last year my son and I did 1,600+ mile self-supported trip through the Rockies on the TramsAm and Lewis and Clark routes on the 520s. I was much happier with the ride of the 700Cs on the road (not the stock tires though... they literally fell apart and were replaced by Schwalbe). We did the Erie Canal the summer before that and wide 26" tires would have been better than the 32x700s we had on the 520s because the tow path surface was soft. Assuming you are road riding, given your height I'd stick with the 700C tire size... my 26" wheeled bike just didn't "roll" as well on the road.

In my younger days I obsessed over my bikes (my road bikes were typically Reynolds 531 frames with Campagnolo components and tubulars). Over time I figured out that barring accidents personal skill, equipment maintenance, and the ability to persevere seem to make the most difference on the road... That said, paint color could be a valid selection criteria across the bikes on your list!

As well as the fact custom is not needed for the vast vast majority of people. There is a reason that stock frame sizes exist and are roughly the same across most bikes. They fit people. No need for custom angles and tube lengths. Or the various special braze-ons and doo hickeys a custom maker can add. They are not on every bike made because they are not needed.

Not saying you should not buy a custom frame. But the final bike you end up with will almost certainly be identical to a factory bike you can buy in a store. No difference.

I disagree with Russ. There are differences between stock and custom bikes just as there are differences between a custom made suit and a suit off the rack; just as there are differences between a Huffy and a Trek. After being happy with my stock bikes, I decided to invest in a custom bike. My last two bikes have been custom (Waterford) and I can tell the difference in the ride and how I feel at the end of the ride. An added benefit is the very noticeable craftsmanship differences. There are some excellent stock bikes and investing in a custom bike is not necessary to enjoy riding, but there are differences, and that is why there is a difference in cost.